Published on

Kusama’s Infinite Dreams & Wes Anderson’s Quirky Worlds

January 2026 slipped in quietly, then exploded with color, symmetry, and pure wonder. Galleries worldwide woke up from holiday hibernation with shows that felt like portals—immersive, playful, and deeply personal. This month’s art scene wasn’t just viewing; it was stepping inside someone else’s mind and never wanting to leave.

Switzerland’s Fondation Beyeler delivered the knockout punch with Yayoi Kusama’s major retrospective. Her infinity mirror rooms turned visitors into floating dots in endless space—polka dots everywhere, lights reflecting forever, a hypnotic mix of joy and obsession. People queued for hours just to stand in the glowing voids, emerging wide-eyed and a little disoriented. It’s Kusama at her most vulnerable and triumphant: repetition as therapy, infinity as escape. The show runs through late January, and it’s already being called one of the decade’s must-see experiences.

Here are glimpses inside those endless worlds:

The London Design Museum countered with pure whimsy: “Wes Anderson: The Archives.” It’s like walking into one of his films—pastel hotel lobbies, perfectly centered props from “The Grand Budapest Hotel,” vintage costumes, storyboards, and miniature sets that make you feel like you’re directing the next scene. The symmetry is obsessive, the colors nostalgic, and the whole thing feels oddly comforting in a chaotic world. Fans left humming the soundtrack, already planning repeat visits.

These shots capture the meticulous magic:

San Francisco’s SFMOMA kept the vibrancy high with Takashi Murakami’s explosive pop art takeover. Super-flat flowers, smiling mushrooms, anime-inspired chaos in electric pinks, blues, and yellows. It’s loud, joyful, and unapologetically commercial—blurring the line between fine art and streetwear. Viewers walked out buzzing, some even snapping selfies with the giant flower sculptures like they were old friends.

A few standout moments from Murakami’s colorful universe:

The month also teased bigger things ahead—student juried shows at SVA in New York spotlighted raw, emerging talent, while Houston’s Menil Collection explored themes of stillness and motion through quiet, contemplative works. It all built anticipation for upcoming retrospectives like Marcel Duchamp at MoMA and Tracey Emin at Tate Modern later in the year.

January’s art vibe was gentle yet powerful: a reminder that creativity can heal, transport, and delight all at once. In a post-holiday haze, these exhibitions gave us permission to dream big again—through mirrors, symmetry, and endless flowers.

Craving more? → Artsy’s full 2026 exhibition preview here → Wallpaper*’s January art guide here → The Art Newspaper’s must-see list here

GOSSIP STONE TV

breaking celebrity gossip

Latest News

You Keep Seeing Olivia Blais Everywhere, and Here’s Why

Okay, we need to talk about her. Be honest — you've scrolled past Olivia Blais roughly four hundred times this month and never once clocked it was the same girl. Swimwear ad? Her. Beauty campaign that made you side-eye y

Florida Men’s Fashion Week’s Fifth Season Turned Miami Into a Runway, Art Room, and Culture Lab

Florida Men’s Fashion Week returned to Miami for its fifth season with runway shows, art dialogue, emerging designers, and a sharper independent fashion identity across Skate Park Miami and Hilton Miami Aventura.

Sunny Isles Beach Fashion Week Debuted With Couture Drama, Miami Glamour, and a VUGA Foundation Mission

Sunny Isles Beach Fashion Week made its debut on May 29 with VUGA Foundation support, a wide designer lineup, couture drama, swimwear, beauty direction, and Miami creative energy.

Drag Queens Stormed Miami Swim Week as Planet Fashion TV Delivered a Love Letter to Miami

Planet Fashion TV’s Saturday Night Showcase during Miami Swim Week brought together Palace South Beach, Miss USA 2025 Audrey Eckert, Eliad Cohen Swim, Dur Doux, AVIDLOVE, Beau Swim, Cassandra Youngs, Josephine’s Closet, and Vana Swim for one of Miami Swim Week’s most theatrical runway moments.